California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

Post by ASUHATER! »

California really needs to figure out desalination so they can stop stealing Arizona, Utah, Nevada and Colorado's water.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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ASUHATER! wrote:California really needs to figure out desalination so they can stop stealing Arizona, Utah, Nevada and Colorado's water.
It's a difficult economic proposition for private industry -- desalination will always be more expensive than diverted water from the river through existing infrastructure. So there's only money to be made once the existing sources run dry, which can't be predicted in advance with certainty and once it occurs will be too late.

Classic case that necessitates government intervention in the market and it would also address the earthquake concerns that plague the existing water infrastructure in this state. Unfortunately there is zero chance of that happening from within California state government and the feds aren't going to do a damned thing for California.

Of course, just getting the parasitic farmers to stop wasting water growing almonds would be a huge step forward too.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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legallykenny wrote:
ASUHATER! wrote:California really needs to figure out desalination so they can stop stealing Arizona, Utah, Nevada and Colorado's water.
It's a difficult economic proposition for private industry -- desalination will always be more expensive than diverted water from the river through existing infrastructure. So there's only money to be made once the existing sources run dry, which can't be predicted in advance with certainty and once it occurs will be too late.

Classic case that necessitates government intervention in the market and it would also address the earthquake concerns that plague the existing water infrastructure in this state. Unfortunately there is zero chance of that happening from within California state government and the feds aren't going to do a damned thing for California.

Of course, just getting the parasitic farmers to stop wasting water growing almonds would be a huge step forward too.
Good point on almonds those things waste water like nobody's business.. and are gross
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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One of my brothers in law had a house in Casa Grande that backed up to the cotton fields there. Hated it, due to the all the dust, and the bugs crawling into his yard when they sprayed the fields.

Arizona needs to ask itself, do you really want to grow water intensive crops in a desert?

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Old timers will remember a lot of citrus farms around Tucson (e.g. Tangerine Rd). The city eventually bought up all the water rights from farmers and orchards around town.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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https://ensia.com/features/in-an-arid-u ... ck-factor/

IN AN ARID U.S. WEST, WATER AGENCIES LOOK TO DELIVE​R​ PURIFIED WASTEWATER DIRECTLY TO CUSTOMERS’ FAUCETS​, DESPITE “YUCK FACTOR”
August 3, 2021 — Editor’s note: This story is part of a four-part series — “Hotter, Drier, Smarter: Managing Western Water in a Changing Climate” — about innovative approaches to water management in the U.S. West and Western tribal nations. The series is supported by The Water Desk , an independent journalism initiative based at the University of Colorado Boulder’s Center for Environmental Journalism. You can read the other stories in the series, along with more drinking water reporting, here.

For decades, water officials in San Diego, realizing the city was facing an ever-drier future, have worked to make the idea of what’s known as “direct potable reuse,” or DPR, more palatable to residents. In the 1990s, that turned into an uphill battle. The technology delivers purified wastewater to customers’ faucets without an environmental buffer — such as a groundwater aquifer, river or other go-between — prior to distribution, so opponents labeled it “toilet-to-tap.” The epithet stuck and torpedoed the Southern California city’s water recycling plans.

But of course the water issues stuck around as well, leaving the city to continue looking for new sources of water, especially those that might be drought proof.

And San Diego is just one city among many in the country’s most arid regions facing the ongoing threat of long-term drought. Western water agencies continue working to not only conserve water, but to also reuse as much wastewater as possible, including from the stable supply DPR promises. As San Diego discovered decades ago, making DPR a reality entails — along with regulatory and permitting changes — trying to overcome the “yuck factor.” Today, despite its “toilet-to-tap” hurdle, San Diego is now intent on becoming the first city in California to convey treated effluent directly from factory to faucet.

“We’re ahead right now, and it looks like we’ll be the first ones out of the gate,” says John Stufflebean, assistant director of the San Diego Public Utilities Department and executive lead for Pure Water San Diego, the name of the city’s latest water reuse project.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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So when I'm staying in a hotel in San Diego, I'm showering in clean piss and diarrhea, right?
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Longhorned wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 12:03 pm So when I'm staying in a hotel in San Diego, I'm showering in clean piss and diarrhea, right?
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Longhorned wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 12:03 pm So when I'm staying in a hotel in San Diego, I'm showering in clean piss and diarrhea, right?
In the future, yes.

People in La Jolla, Point Loma, and elsewhere in San Diego couldn't care less how high water rates are raised to discourage unwise consumption. They are going to water their lawns and ornamental gardens no matter how high rates get. Doesn't matter at all to them.

Yet, that I know of, no new houses are required to have a simple and cheap modification of channeling roof rain water to barrels to be judiciously dripped in gardens or elsewhere.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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The fact that rainwater harvesting isn't universal is ridiculous
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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ASUHATER! wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 12:41 pm The fact that rainwater harvesting isn't universal is ridiculous
Most states don't have any regulation in regards to water harvesting but some do.

https://worldwaterreserve.com/rainwater ... rainwater/
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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The next MAGA-Again message: There's no drought or water shortage! Make American cities The NASCAR Racetracks of water waste!
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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It's God's punishment, but only in the blue counties.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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dovecanyoncat wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 12:54 pm The next MAGA-Again message: There's no drought or water shortage! Make American cities The NASCAR Racetracks of water waste!
"The Democrats want you to shower in urine and diarrhea."

BOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!

"They say it's clean urine and diarrhea."

BOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!

"Come on. We'll give them a chance, right? Maybe they're right. Maybe they'll clean the urine and diarrhea before we all drink it, right?"

BOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!

"Maybe a man in a dress will enter the girls' locker room and drink the urine and diarrhea right out of them, right?"

HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!!!!

"Maybe it's a good way to kill more infants. Maybe! I don't know. Who knows? I don't know. I don't know."
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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The above demonstrates how correct I am in saying that between LH and AZGreg the position of Whitehouse press secretary would be well in hand if only Those Lame Liberals would let our two ambassadors of wit drive the fucking bus. Addendum: they would require Chicat as paid consultant to flesh out the retail interface.

But no one listens to me.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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ASUHATER! wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 12:41 pm The fact that rainwater harvesting isn't universal is ridiculous
We harvest rain water and put it in these things we call lakes. We move it around to bigger lakes in theses things we call rivers.

But seriously, in wilderness survival class we used a big sheet of visqueen with a rock on it and a cup below the stone, then we peed under the sheet, it evaporated, condensed on the plastic, ran down to the stone and dropped into the cup and we drank it.
Solar still, easy peesie.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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CatsbyAZ wrote: Sun May 24, 2015 2:18 pm
UAdevil wrote:What assholes.


http://kron4.com/2015/05/22/vandals-des ... -into-bay/

Vandals destroy dam, release 49 million gallons of water into Bay
Probably Berkeley grad students carrying out a class assignment.
The Monkey Wrench Gang.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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azgreg wrote: Mon Aug 03, 2015 9:40 am When is the Carlsbad desal plant due to come online?
Huh. CARLSBAD? I would have thought San Onofre would have been a better location.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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I'm on a MAGA dominated FB page for residents of an area in AZ where we have a vacation house. Most of the fools on there are from southern California.

When the issue of the severe shortage on the river came up, most think its just a giant liberal conspiracy. We're screwed and may very well go the way of the Anasazi if we don't adopt measures to keep our population growth in check.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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azgreg wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 12:29 pm
Longhorned wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 12:03 pm So when I'm staying in a hotel in San Diego, I'm showering in clean piss and diarrhea, right?

When I saw this movie in the theater, I was thinking "why doesn't he just filter seawater?". Urine contains urea which your kidneys need to work harder to filter.

RichardCranium wrote: Wed Oct 06, 2021 2:21 am
azgreg wrote: Mon Aug 03, 2015 9:40 am When is the Carlsbad desal plant due to come online?
Huh. CARLSBAD? I would have thought San Onofre would have been a better location.

They could convert that old nuclear power plant to use tidal or wind energy to power the desal plant.

My youngest son in the San Diego area (PB) says that utilities are extremely high down there, even compared to PG&E who provides my electricity.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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And unfortunately it's going to be in La niña winter where most of central and southern California gets not much rain
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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$98 billion surplus. Lets start making some water!!
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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azgreg wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 1:00 pm
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Looks like a lot of rich boomer NIMBYs celebrating killing the plant that would provide water to people decades after they're gone.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

Post by UofAlum05 »

ASUHATER! wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 1:29 pm Looks like a lot of rich boomer NIMBYs celebrating killing the plant that would provide water to people decades after they're gone.
Huntington is full of awful people so on that end it is not surprising. But it was also being fought by extreme environmentalist who believed the salt discharge would destroy Marine life.

Sustainability is really complicated because a lot of the things we need to do to become more sustainable and green in the long term means using items that are harmful to the planet in the short term.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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I still support that more sustainable plan to drink sewer water with the shit and piss removed.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Longhorned wrote: Sat May 14, 2022 8:42 am I still support that more sustainable plan to drink sewer water with the shit and piss removed.
We're pretty much already doing that. Everytime a toilet flushes in Vegas, it goes into the drinking water supply downstream.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Las Vegas does what Tucson does in the Santa Cruz.

They release treated wastewater into a wetland which flows into the aquifer and Lake Mead. Their drinking water is supplied by Lake Mead, so not exactly toilet to tap, but it’s a cycle.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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wyo-cat wrote: Sun May 15, 2022 8:48 am Las Vegas does what Tucson does in the Santa Cruz.

They release treated wastewater into a wetland which flows into the aquifer and Lake Mead. Their drinking water is supplied by Lake Mead, so not exactly toilet to tap, but it’s a cycle.
Every time a toilet flushes in Vegas, Laughlin, Bullhead, Needles, and Lake Havasu, it ends up in the water supply of Tucson, L.A. San Diego, Yuma. and Mexicali.
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Re: Arizona Has One Year of Water Left

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My dad was telling me about this place in AZ that has to have water trucked in. Might be Rio Verde near Scottsdale.


https://www.abc15.com/weather/impact-ea ... e-of-water
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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The vessel narrows at the bottom.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

Post by RichardCranium »

I don't want to say there's nothing wrong, because clearly there is.

However, this thread was started in 2015. Has California actually run out of water yet?

Mayhaps the thread title could be changed to something that doesn't age so badly?
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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azgreg wrote: Sun Aug 28, 2022 3:48 pm


Good. I'm just as concerned about my absolutely insane electricity bill.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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GlobalCat wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 8:29 am Good. I'm just as concerned about my absolutely insane electricity bill.
What region do you live in? I live in the PG&E region but in a cool coastal area so cooling is not a concern. No central air where I live. But even then my electric bill is $125 a month or so. Newsom is trying to keep Diablo Canyon open longer to help mitigate costs.

My youngest son lives in Pacific Beach, and has an extremely small studio with no cooling, and says he pays about the same as I do with SDGE for his studio as I pay for PG&E for my house. No doubt somewhat related to San Onofre being shut down.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Merkin wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 9:05 am
GlobalCat wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 8:29 am Good. I'm just as concerned about my absolutely insane electricity bill.
What region do you live in? I live in the PG&E region but in a cool coastal area so cooling is not a concern. No central air where I live. But even then my electric bill is $125 a month or so. Newsom is trying to keep Diablo Canyon open longer to help mitigate costs.

My youngest son lives in Pacific Beach, and has an extremely small studio with no cooling, and says he pays about the same as I do with SDGE for his studio as I pay for PG&E for my house. No doubt somewhat related to San Onofre being shut down.
Maybe, but more likely related to SDGE making as much profit as possible. Sempra, the owner of SDGE is not known for ethics.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

Post by azgreg »

Stopped by Lake Mead today on the way home from Vegas and my god. I'm struggling to see a way out of this.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Department of Interior announcing that without a stated plan by Jan 31 from seven Southwest states to reduce water usage from the Colorado River, the Feds will propose their own cuts for each state.

From the Guardian:

"Six western states that rely on water from the Colorado River have agreed on a model to dramatically cut water use in the basin, months after the federal government called for action and an initial deadline passed. California – with the largest allocation of water from the river – is the lone holdout. Officials said the state would release its own plan."

"States missed a mid-August deadline to heed the US Bureau of Reclamation’s call to propose ways to conserve 2m to 4m acre-feet of water. They regrouped to reach consensus by the end of January to fold into a larger proposal Reclamation has in the works. Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Wyoming sent a letter on Monday to Reclamation, which operates the major dams in the river system, to outline an alternative that builds on existing guidelines, deepens water cuts and factors in water that is lost through evaporation and transportation."
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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Meanwhile, in Arizona, the battle for water between Scottsdale and Rio Verde Foothills has expanded somewhat to include Carefree.

CAREFREE, Ariz. — "The Rio Verde Foothills water battle with the city of Scottsdale is now spilling into neighboring communities.

ABC15 visited the town of Carefree, where leaders have told certain water haulers they aren’t allowed to fill up anymore this year.

Carefree Water Company says three separate haulers have already exceeded their allotment — using as much water in January as they did in all of 2022.

As a result, they’ve been cut off."


https://www.abc15.com/news/region-north ... ommunities
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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This is the biggest reason I moved out of Arizona. I knew water was going to become a big issue. I am afraid this legislation is just the start.
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

Post by Merkin »

California probably deserves an even bigger share. Do you want the water to go to green yards and swimming pools in Phoenix and Las Vegas, or to agriculture in California?


Good article here on the water rights issue, and why California has the senior claim.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/27/clim ... ticleShare


Farms versus subdivisions

That leaves California and Arizona, which have rights to 4.4 million and 2.8 million acre-feet from the Colorado — typically the largest and third-largest allotments among the seven states. Negotiators from both sides seem convinced of one thing: The other state ought to come up with more cuts.

In California, the largest user of Colorado River water is the Imperial Irrigation District, which has rights to 3.1 million acre-feet — as much as Arizona and Nevada put together. That water lets farmers grow alfalfa, lettuce and broccoli on about 800 square miles of the Imperial Valley, in the southeast corner of California.

California has senior water rights to Arizona, which means that Arizona’s supply should be cut before California is forced to take reductions, according to JB Hamby, vice president of the Imperial Irrigation District and chairman of the Colorado River Board of California, which is negotiating for the state.

“We have sound legal footing,” Mr. Hamby said in an interview. He said that fast-growing Arizona should have been ready for the Colorado River drying up. “That’s kind of a responsibility on their part to plan for these risk factors.”



Arizona does have other sources some other states do not, like NV.

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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

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72% of AZ water goes to agriculture. Many of those guys that work up in the central valley in the summer head to Yuma in the winter. Only 22% of Arizona's water goes to municipal use. 6% to industry
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

Post by Merkin »

But does a desert need to be producing crops that require a huge amount of water? And yes, that goes for the Imperial Valley too.

Image




https://www.azfamily.com/2022/10/02/mos ... n-arizona/

Lemons
Annual production: $22.6 million
Top states:
#1. California ($638.2 million)
#2. Arizona ($22.6 million)

Cabbage
Annual production: $56.1 million
Top states:
#1. California ($155.2 million)
#2. New York ($76.3 million)
#3. Arizona ($56.1 million)
#4. Florida ($45.3 million)
#5. Texas ($44.2 million)

Cauliflower
Annual production: $76.9 million
Top states:
#1. California ($265.9 million)
#2. Arizona ($76.9 million)


Broccoli
- Annual production: $87.5 million
Top states:
#1. California ($631.5 million)
#2. Arizona ($87.5 million)

Melons
Annual production: $91.9 million
Top states:
#1. Florida ($192.4 million)
#2. California ($162.9 million)
#3. Georgia ($103.7 million)
#4. Arizona ($91.9 million)
#5. Texas ($54.3 million)

Pecans
Annual production: $92.8 million
Top states:
#1. New Mexico ($188.9 million)
#2. Georgia ($182.5 million)
#3. Arizona ($92.8 million)
#4. Texas ($69.2 million)
#5. Oklahoma ($17.5 million)

Dates
Annual production: $93.0 million
Top states:
#1. California ($135.6 million)
#2. Arizona ($93.0 million)

Spinach
Annual production: $113.6 million
Top states:
#1. California ($358.8 million)
#2. Arizona ($113.6 million)
#3. New Jersey ($14.2 million)
#4. Texas ($9.6 million)

Lettuce
Annual production: $291.0 million
Top states:
#1. California ($768.5 million)
#2. Arizona ($291.0 million)
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Carcassdragger
Posts: 3139
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Re: California Has One Year of Water Left

Post by Carcassdragger »

Merkin wrote: Tue Jan 31, 2023 2:27 pm But does a desert need to be producing crops that require a huge amount of water? And yes, that goes for the Imperial Valley too.

Image




https://www.azfamily.com/2022/10/02/mos ... n-arizona/

Lemons
Annual production: $22.6 million
Top states:
#1. California ($638.2 million)
#2. Arizona ($22.6 million)

Cabbage
Annual production: $56.1 million
Top states:
#1. California ($155.2 million)
#2. New York ($76.3 million)
#3. Arizona ($56.1 million)
#4. Florida ($45.3 million)
#5. Texas ($44.2 million)

Cauliflower
Annual production: $76.9 million
Top states:
#1. California ($265.9 million)
#2. Arizona ($76.9 million)


Broccoli
- Annual production: $87.5 million
Top states:
#1. California ($631.5 million)
#2. Arizona ($87.5 million)

Melons
Annual production: $91.9 million
Top states:
#1. Florida ($192.4 million)
#2. California ($162.9 million)
#3. Georgia ($103.7 million)
#4. Arizona ($91.9 million)
#5. Texas ($54.3 million)

Pecans
Annual production: $92.8 million
Top states:
#1. New Mexico ($188.9 million)
#2. Georgia ($182.5 million)
#3. Arizona ($92.8 million)
#4. Texas ($69.2 million)
#5. Oklahoma ($17.5 million)

Dates
Annual production: $93.0 million
Top states:
#1. California ($135.6 million)
#2. Arizona ($93.0 million)

Spinach
Annual production: $113.6 million
Top states:
#1. California ($358.8 million)
#2. Arizona ($113.6 million)
#3. New Jersey ($14.2 million)
#4. Texas ($9.6 million)

Lettuce
Annual production: $291.0 million
Top states:
#1. California ($768.5 million)
#2. Arizona ($291.0 million)
Good that your pic showed a cotton field.

Cotton has a very high water budget. What's insane about this is that, more often than not, the cotton market is federally subsidized, meaning there is usually a world wide glut of cotton on the market. Farmers like to grow it as a means to get high returns on the taxpayers back. This is one reason farmers like Republicans because Republican administrations tend to support the cotton welfare program. Doubly insane since cotton uses so much water.

Last summer I could show you cotton fields on Colorado River irrigated sandy mesa soil which, for any crop, requires more water than other soils. It should be illegal to grow cotton, and gain taxpayer provided subsidies, when the grower made the choice to plant on these soils. Just an absurd scenario. Your tax money pays for this absurd waste.

On the other hand, the desert agricultural areas are the most productive farm fields in the world. Does it make good strategic sense to cut off our nation's food factories? To replace them in areas within our nation which are more moist and closer to the water source would mean converting many more acres of habitat into farms.
2020 BEARDOWN WILDCATS RAP Champion
2018 BEARDOWN WILDCATS SURVIVAL POOL Champion
2017 BEARDOWN WILDCATS RAP Champion
2013 GOAZCATS SURVIVAL POOL Champion
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